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The Effects of Banking Competition on Growth and
Financial Stability: Evidence from the National Banking Era
Mark Carlson, Sergio Correia, and Stephan Luck1
September 7, 2018Views do not necessarily represent views of the Federal Reserve
1Federal Reserve Board1 / 19
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Research question
How does competition in banking affect
1. Credit provision?
2. Financial stability?
3. Real economic outcomes?
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What do we know? (Theory)
→ Competition may lead to more (less) lending and more (less) risky
lending
• Credit supply• Standard IO argument: competition increases credit
(Klein, 1971)• Relationships matter: competition decreases credit
(Petersen and Rajan, 1995)
• Risk taking• Monopolist decreases risk to protect charter value
(Keeley, 1990)• Monopolist increases rates and lending becomes more risky
(Boyd and DeNicolo, 2005)
• Synthesis• Depends on stage of development of economy
(Cetorelli and Peretto, 2012; Martinez-Miera and Repullo, 2010)
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What do we know? (Theory)
→ Competition may lead to more (less) lending and more (less) risky
lending
• Credit supply• Standard IO argument: competition increases credit
(Klein, 1971)• Relationships matter: competition decreases credit
(Petersen and Rajan, 1995)
• Risk taking• Monopolist decreases risk to protect charter value
(Keeley, 1990)• Monopolist increases rates and lending becomes more risky
(Boyd and DeNicolo, 2005)
• Synthesis• Depends on stage of development of economy
(Cetorelli and Peretto, 2012; Martinez-Miera and Repullo, 2010)
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What do we know? (Theory)
→ Competition may lead to more (less) lending and more (less) risky
lending
• Credit supply• Standard IO argument: competition increases credit
(Klein, 1971)• Relationships matter: competition decreases credit
(Petersen and Rajan, 1995)
• Risk taking• Monopolist decreases risk to protect charter value
(Keeley, 1990)• Monopolist increases rates and lending becomes more risky
(Boyd and DeNicolo, 2005)
• Synthesis• Depends on stage of development of economy
(Cetorelli and Peretto, 2012; Martinez-Miera and Repullo, 2010)
3 / 19
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What do we know? (Empirical evidence)
• Identification challenge: competition and concentration are not
exogenous• Most evidence based on lifting of branching restrictions
(Jayaratne and Strahan, 1996, 1998, Black and Strahan, 2002; Cetorelli andStrahan, 2006; Dick and Lehnert, 2010; Jiang et al., 2016)
• Confounding factors:• Ability to diversify geographically
(Goetz et al., 2016)
• Political economy of bank mergers
(Agarwal et al., 2012; Calomiris and Haber, 2014)
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What do we know? (Empirical evidence)
• Identification challenge: competition and concentration are not
exogenous• Most evidence based on lifting of branching restrictions
(Jayaratne and Strahan, 1996, 1998, Black and Strahan, 2002; Cetorelli andStrahan, 2006; Dick and Lehnert, 2010; Jiang et al., 2016)
• Confounding factors:• Ability to diversify geographically
(Goetz et al., 2016)
• Political economy of bank mergers
(Agarwal et al., 2012; Calomiris and Haber, 2014)
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What do we know? (Empirical evidence)
• Identification challenge: competition and concentration are not
exogenous• Most evidence based on lifting of branching restrictions
(Jayaratne and Strahan, 1996, 1998, Black and Strahan, 2002; Cetorelli andStrahan, 2006; Dick and Lehnert, 2010; Jiang et al., 2016)
• Confounding factors:• Ability to diversify geographically
(Goetz et al., 2016)
• Political economy of bank mergers
(Agarwal et al., 2012; Calomiris and Haber, 2014)
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Why the National Banking Era? (1864–1913)
1. Little government interference• No deposit insurance• No bailouts• No lender of last resort• No mergers
2. Prevalence of unit banking (no branching) ensures local banking
markets
3. Capital regulation gives rise to exogenous variation in barriers to entry
⇒ Close to ideal laboratory
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Why the National Banking Era? (1864–1913)
1. Little government interference• No deposit insurance• No bailouts• No lender of last resort• No mergers
2. Prevalence of unit banking (no branching) ensures local banking
markets
3. Capital regulation gives rise to exogenous variation in barriers to entry
⇒ Close to ideal laboratory
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Why the National Banking Era? (1864–1913)
1. Little government interference• No deposit insurance• No bailouts• No lender of last resort• No mergers
2. Prevalence of unit banking (no branching) ensures local banking
markets
3. Capital regulation gives rise to exogenous variation in barriers to entry
⇒ Close to ideal laboratory
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Why the National Banking Era? (1864–1913)
1. Little government interference• No deposit insurance• No bailouts• No lender of last resort• No mergers
2. Prevalence of unit banking (no branching) ensures local banking
markets
3. Capital regulation gives rise to exogenous variation in barriers to entry
⇒ Close to ideal laboratory
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Strategy: Exploit discontinuity in capital requirements during National
Banking Era
• Minimum capital (equity) required to open a bank• Based on the legal population of town/city at time of founding
• “Legal population” based on the last decennial census
• In dollar terms, not as a ratio:
“Capital stock paid in” ≥
$50, 000 if population ≤ 6, 000
$100, 000 if population ∈ (6, 000, 50, 000]
$200, 000 if population > 50, 000
• Capital requirements don’t affect existing banks; act as barriers to entry• Sylla (1969), James (1978)
• Exploit publication of 1880 decennial census, which shifted the
population of some towns above the 6,000 threshold
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Strategy: Exploit discontinuity in capital requirements during National
Banking Era
• Minimum capital (equity) required to open a bank• Based on the legal population of town/city at time of founding
• “Legal population” based on the last decennial census
• In dollar terms, not as a ratio:
“Capital stock paid in” ≥
$50, 000 if population ≤ 6, 000
$100, 000 if population ∈ (6, 000, 50, 000]
$200, 000 if population > 50, 000
• Capital requirements don’t affect existing banks; act as barriers to entry• Sylla (1969), James (1978)
• Exploit publication of 1880 decennial census, which shifted the
population of some towns above the 6,000 threshold
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Strategy: Exploit discontinuity in capital requirements during National
Banking Era
• Minimum capital (equity) required to open a bank• Based on the legal population of town/city at time of founding
• “Legal population” based on the last decennial census
• In dollar terms, not as a ratio:
“Capital stock paid in” ≥
$50, 000 if population ≤ 6, 000
$100, 000 if population ∈ (6, 000, 50, 000]
$200, 000 if population > 50, 000
• Capital requirements don’t affect existing banks; act as barriers to entry• Sylla (1969), James (1978)
• Exploit publication of 1880 decennial census, which shifted the
population of some towns above the 6,000 threshold
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Strategy: Exploit discontinuity in capital requirements during National
Banking Era
• Minimum capital (equity) required to open a bank• Based on the legal population of town/city at time of founding
• “Legal population” based on the last decennial census
• In dollar terms, not as a ratio:
“Capital stock paid in” ≥
$50, 000 if population ≤ 6, 000
$100, 000 if population ∈ (6, 000, 50, 000]
$200, 000 if population > 50, 000
• Capital requirements don’t affect existing banks; act as barriers to entry• Sylla (1969), James (1978)
• Exploit publication of 1880 decennial census, which shifted the
population of some towns above the 6,000 threshold
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Findings
1. Competition increases credit provision• Banks increase credit provision to deter potential entrants
2. Competition increases risk taking→ Trade-off between credit provision and financial stability• Higher leverage• Seize more collateral• More likely to fail during major financial crisis (Panic of 1893)
3. Increased credit provision correlates with economic growth
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Findings
1. Competition increases credit provision• Banks increase credit provision to deter potential entrants
2. Competition increases risk taking→ Trade-off between credit provision and financial stability• Higher leverage• Seize more collateral• More likely to fail during major financial crisis (Panic of 1893)
3. Increased credit provision correlates with economic growth
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Findings
1. Competition increases credit provision• Banks increase credit provision to deter potential entrants
2. Competition increases risk taking→ Trade-off between credit provision and financial stability• Higher leverage• Seize more collateral• More likely to fail during major financial crisis (Panic of 1893)
3. Increased credit provision correlates with economic growth
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Data: OCC Annual Report to the Congress (1867–1904)
(111,097 balance sheets for 7,115 banks in 38 years)
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The national banking system in 1870
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The national banking system in 1880
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The national banking system in 1890
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The national banking system in 1900
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Data
• OCC’s annual “Call Reports”• Data for all national banks from 1867 to 1904
• Population from Schmidt (2017)
• Manufacturing outcomes from Haines (2004)
• Railroad connections from Atack (2013)
• State chartered banks from Jaremski and Fishback (2018)
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Sample I
• Study the publication of the 1880 population census (March 3, 1882)• Exclude towns that when the 1880 census was published
• Had no national banks• Were already above the 6,000 threshold
• Exclude West and former Confederate states
• Focus on behavior of incumbent banks, with unchanged capital
requirements
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Sample I
• Study the publication of the 1880 population census (March 3, 1882)• Exclude towns that when the 1880 census was published
• Had no national banks• Were already above the 6,000 threshold
• Exclude West and former Confederate states
• Focus on behavior of incumbent banks, with unchanged capital
requirements
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Sample I
• Study the publication of the 1880 population census (March 3, 1882)• Exclude towns that when the 1880 census was published
• Had no national banks• Were already above the 6,000 threshold
• Exclude West and former Confederate states
• Focus on behavior of incumbent banks, with unchanged capital
requirements
11 / 19
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Sample I
• Study the publication of the 1880 population census (March 3, 1882)• Exclude towns that when the 1880 census was published
• Had no national banks• Were already above the 6,000 threshold
• Exclude West and former Confederate states
• Focus on behavior of incumbent banks, with unchanged capital
requirements
11 / 19
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Sample II
• Treated cities (blue) are either larger to begin with or grow faster
• Similar in railroad access and manufacturing
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Bank entry: Fewer national banks on towns above the threshold by 1891
Fewer entry barriers︷ ︸︸ ︷ More barriers︷ ︸︸ ︷
• After 10 years, about 0.2 fewer banks in towns that cross the threshold• Similar results when including state-chartered banks 13 / 19
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Credit supply I: Ten-year growth of loan portfolio
• 22% lower loan growth over the ten-year period
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Credit supply II: Dynamics
• Incumbents contract lending when the census is published, not
gradually through the next ten years
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Risk taking I: Leverage in 1891
• Incumbents in towns that cross the threshold have 27% lower leverage
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Risk taking II: Ex-post measures of risk
• Leverage does not necessarily reflect risk taking• To corroborate finding we show that competitive banks
• seize more collateral• twice as likely to fail during financial crisis (Panic of 1893)
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Real effects: Manufacturing capital in 1890
• Banks that cross the threshold have a 17% slower growth in
manufacturing capital
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Summary
• Identifying causal effects of banking competition is extremelychallenging• National Banking Era is a close to ideal laboratory
• Findings:• Banks in towns with higher barriers to entry are more sound, but at the cost
of a slower loan growth• Real effects: increasing barriers to entry reduces local manufacturing capital
• Implications:• Trade-off between credit growth and financial stability• Regulations increasing charter values could depress credit but increase
stability• Especially relevant in lightly regulated parts of financial sector
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